Imperial Valley Press

‘Solo’ sputters in takeoff with $83.3M at box office

- BY JAKE COYLE AP Film Writer

NEW YORK — In the largest disturbanc­e yet in Disney’s otherwise lucrative reign over “Star Wars,” the Han Solo spinoff “Solo: A Star Wars Story” opened well below expectatio­ns with a franchise-low $83.3 million in ticket sales over the threeday weekend in North American theaters.

Disney estimated Sunday that “Solo” will gross $101 million over the four-day Memorial Day weekend, a figure below even the opening weekends of the much-derided “Star Wars” prequels. Last week, forecasts ran as high as $150 million for the four-day haul of “Solo.”

Overseas ticket sales were even worse. “Solo,” starring Alden Ehrenreich in the role made iconic by Harrison Ford, grossed $65 million internatio­nally in its opening weekend, including a paltry $10.1 million in China. “Of course we would have hoped for this to be a bit bigger,” said Dave Hollis, Disney’s distributi­on chief.

“We’re encouraged by the response that people have had to the film. It got a good CinemaScor­e (A-minus). The exits are very encouragin­g.”

“Solo” came in with a Millennium Falcon’s worth of baggage following the mid-production firing of directors Phil Lord and Christophe­r Miller, who were replaced by Ron Howard.

With the rejiggered production, the budget soared well past $250 million.

But the cause of the spinoff’s disappoint­ing performanc­e may have had as much to do with “Star Wars” fatigue (“The Last Jedi” exited theaters just last month) and the stiffer competitio­n of a summer holiday weekend.

While no major releases dared to open against “Solo,” Fox’s “Deadpool 2” moved its release date up a week ahead of “Solo.”

The gambit may have hurt both releases. After debuting with $125 million last weekend, the R-rated Ryan Reynolds sequel dropped 66 percent to second place with $42.7 million and an estimated $53.5 million four-day haul.

“Solo” notched the biggest Memorial Day weekend opening in several years, but it also came on the heels of a pair of a summer-sized blockbuste­rs — “Deadpool 2” and Disney’s own “Avengers Infinity War” — making for an unusually crowded May.

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